There are many of them. Here are a few:
John Tyndall.
George Francis Fitzgerald.
Robert Boyle.
Lochlainn O'Raifeartaigh.
George J. Stoney.
The 19th century Irish physicist who explained why the sky is blue is John Tyndall. Tyndall demonstrated that the blue color of the sky is due to the scattering of sunlight by small particles in the atmosphere, known as the Tyndall effect.
Robert Boyle is a cool and smart Irish Chemist and the first person to identify and separates elements.
Robert Boyle lived in the 17th century. He was an Irish philosopher, chemist, physicist and inventor. He was born in 1627 and died in 1691 CE.
The physicist won the Nobel Prize.Stephen Hawking is a famous physicist. How hard is it to become a physicist?
I am not aware of who invented the erasable pen but Sir Walter McHenery, an Irish physicist, invented an ink that would disappear when held over heat in 1827.
Susan Boyle was born on April 1, 1961.
A physicist specialized in aerodynamics
she was a physicist
foreign Physicist and their contribution
Your spelling is correct.
The physicist conducted groundbreaking research in the field of quantum mechanics.
Electrons: Irish physicist George Johnstone Stoney (and later, successfully, by George F. Fitzgerald)Protons: William Prout called them protyles, Ernest Rutherford suggested proton.